The interactive installation "Shall We Dance, Shanghai?" will be shown in "Jie (Boundaries): Contemporary Art from Taiwan" group exhibition in Cornell University's Johnson Museum of Art. The curator is Dr. An-yi Pan. The following are the link and description of the exhibition:

The multiple ways that globalization has altered Taiwan over the last decade have become important sources for artistic creation, as the works of thirty-three artists included in this exhibition demonstrate. Adopting the philosophical connotations of the Chinese character jie 界 (meaning scope and/or boundary), this exhibition examines the intricate and complicated human and natural boundaries navigated and negotiated by individuals, as well as by Taiwan as a whole, in today’s interconnected world.

The viewpoints of several generations of artists reveal how identity has become more fluid, variable, remixed, and multidimensional, less determined or defined by ethnicity, location, or national allegiances. Works by the generations who grew up, lived through, and struggled against Martial Law (which was lifted in 1987) address issues pertaining to local and international politics and the major social and environmental concerns of our time. Works by younger generations reveal how globalization has affected individual life experience, exposing an inner world tinged with both playfulness and anxiety.

This exhibition, jointly organized by the Johnson Museum of Art and the National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts, was curated by An-yi Pan, associate professor in the Department of the History of Art and Visual Studies at Cornell, assisted by Ellen Avril, chief curator and curator of Asian art at the Johnson Museum. Major support for the exhibition and catalogue is provided by the Ministry of Culture, Republic of China (Taiwan). Additional support for the exhibition and symposium was provided by the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation, the Judith Stoikov ’63 Asian Art Lecture Endowment at the Johnson Museum, and the Cornell East Asia Program.